The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon – e-book published

The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon

Charles Reader’s The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon, a psychological thriller set in Victorian Norfolk, is now available as  an e-book.

The book is a tale of fear, obsession, passion, greed, folly and death. It play itself out against a vast backdrop of marsh and sky – empty, but for distant, shadowy forms

“A fascinating portrait of 19th century Norfolk, with a very exciting plot. Once read, you will want to read again.”  Dr Katrina Ruth, University of  Florida, Gainesville

The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon is on sale at the following e-book stores:

Amazon ,  Browns Books, Booktopia Australia, Barnes and Noble USA, Everand, Bol Netherlands, Kobo, Storytel.

 

Love Your Local Authors Bury St Edmunds

We will be at the Love Your Local Authors book fair at The Constitutional Club, Guildhall Street,  Bury St Edmunds IP33 1PR on Sunday 11 February, from 11am to 4pm, with the full selection of books published by Paul Dickson Books.

The  book fair is free to visit and the bar will be open from 12noon. Love Your Local Author is run by Foreword Festival

The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon – Publication Day

The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon

Happy publication day to The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon and author Charles Reader.

The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon is a tale of fear, obsession, passion, greed, folly and death. It plays itself out against a vast backdrop of marsh and sky – empty but for distant, shadowy forms. This psychological  thriller is primarily set in Victorian Great Yarmouth and the Broads. The book, price £12, is on sale at Allthingsnorfolk and Amazon 

The novel was shortlisted out of an entry of 13,500 in WH Smith’s Raw Talent competition in 2002.

Charles Reader explains: “In 1961, my family came to live near Halvergate Marshes. I was just two years old and so, as I grew up, this landscape was home. In later life I often returned to stay with my parents – yet each time I did so, I realised that more of the old Norfolk speech and ways I’d grown up with had disappeared and were in danger of being forgotten. So, I began writing about this area, using my childhood memories and conversations with our oldest neighbours. This eventually resulted in my novel, The Faces of the Fiend of Breydon.”

 

Norfolk Book Sales Donation to Norfolk & Waveney Mind

Steven Foyster presented a cheque for £250 on Wednesday, November 30 to Kate Frost of Norfolk & Waveney Mind, who is Manager of the REST Hub at Churchman House, Norwich.

The cheque was for proceeds from the Sale of Steven’s memoir, Cry to be Heard! My Road to Recovery, published by Paul Dickson Books. £1 from the sale of every copy of Cry to be Heard! is being donated to the charity.

Kate Frost said: ” I would like to thank Steven and Paul for this very welcome donation. It will be used to buy a new seat for Churchman House Garden.”

Cry to be Heard - Steven Foyster

Flat and Boring There Isn’t It? A celebration of life in the Lincolnshire Fens – New April 2023

Flat and Boring There Isn’t It? A celebration of life in the Lincolnshire Fens by Amanda Pearson will be published by Paul Dickson Books on Monday, April 17, 2023.

Born of a great passion and enthusiasm for the area that Amanda Pearson lives in, and the desire to rid the Fenlands of the negative misconceptions, held by too many, that the area is ‘flat and boring’, this book is a collection of light-hearted prose, amusing anecdotes, illustrative poetry and a selection of Amanda’s beautiful photographs.  Together they bring to life the surroundings, the wildlife, and what it’s like to live out in the Lincolnshire Fens. The aim is to introduce people to a part of the country they may well have otherwise overlooked and to encourage those more local to maybe view the area in a new light.

Amanda Pearson

 

Joseph Crompton: A Journey of Faith – new booklet about Victorian Norwich churchman

Joseph Crompton: A Journey Of Faith

Church historian, Nicholas Groves has uncovered the remarkable ecclesiastical career of Victorian Norwich churchman, Joseph Crompton (1813-1878) in his new booklet, Joseph Crompton: A Journey of Faith. Published by Paul Dickson Books, price £5, one pound from the sale of each booklet will go to The Octagon Chapel.

Crompton’s journey of faith began as a Unitarian minister at The Octagon Chapel, before he branched out and established an independent congregation called the Free Christians, which met at Blackfriars Hall, the former chancel of the Dominican Friary. He then joined the Church of England and ended his career as Rector of St Lawrence, in the wake of Edwin Hillyard’s Ritualist era, which had involved the notorious Father Ignatius and his ‘monks’.

Nicholas Groves explains his interest in Joseph Crompton: “I first encoutered Joseph Crompton when researching for my doctoral thesis, which was on the Ritualist churches of Norwich. The church of St Lawrence was an early (indeed, the second) convert to the Ritualist cause in Norwich, and Crompton became its Rector after a very turbulent period, which involved the notorious ‘Father Ignatius’ (Joseph Leycester Lyne).”

“Looking into his background, I found that he had started out as minister of the Octagon Unitarian Chapel and thought at the time that that was a remarkable change of views. It was not until forced idleness over the summer of 2020 gave me the opportunity that I was able to look further into his life. What I was not to know in 2008 was that I should mirror his journey in reverse, going from St George Tombland, another of the churches that had a Ritualist tradition, to The Octagon. In my case, organ-playing was the catalyst.”

“What the members of The Octagon thought of the goings-on at St Lawrence we can but guess; likewise we can only guess (though probabaly with some degree of accuracy) what St Lawrence’s thought of The Octagon. It takes a degree of fortitude for someone to change thier religious views so much, but to do so in the same city, as a clergyman, even more so. That Joseph Crompton came out of this with goodwill on all sides says much about him.”

Nicholas Groves has been involved with various Norwich churches since 1981. He has taught at both school and university level and is now a freelance writer and lecturer. He is a trustee of the Norwich Historic Churches Trust and of The Octagon Unitarian Chapel, where he also plays the organ.

Joseph Crompton: A Journey of Faith is on sale at Allthingsnorfolk.com, Amazon, Revelation Bookshop Norwich and City Bookshop Norwich.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Norfolk Authors, Books and Cake

Paul Dickson Books

Sunday 3 April, 3pm at the Assembly Rooms, Swaffham PE37 7QH.

Hear from Norfolk authors, Peter Sargent, Neil Haverson and Janet Collingsworth and publisher Paul Dickson and enjoy a full afternoon tea, in aid of Norfolk and Waveney Mind.

Peter Sargent is a former EDP  journalist and has written three East Anglian history books, along with My Word!, an explorationm of the origins of our favourite words.

Neil Haverson worked for many years for ECN and Archant and was latterly Editor of Let’s Talk magazine. He has written a memoir, Ink in my Blood about his 50 years in the Norfolk media.

Janet Collingsworth’s book, Tell me about the farm Grandad is a memoir of growing up in 1960s Norfolk.

Paul Dickson is an independent publisher based in Norwich.

Tickets, £20 from Eventbrite or Ceres Bookshop, Swaffham, t. 01760 722504.